Frank N. McMillan is an award-winning author,
professor, and speaker residing in Corpus Christi, Texas.
Frank N. McMillan is an award-winning author,
professor, and speaker residing in Corpus Christi, Texas.
Nature is now proven to be nonlocal; holistically connected in a manner that transcends previously scientifically-accepted constraints of time and space. Quantum physicists also posit a fundamental role for consciousness (the objective psyche) in nature. Recent experiments confirm that the world (matter) doesn't exist until it is observed by a perceiving mind. What or who is the author of mind? That remains a mystery. Nevertheless, we find ourselves reborn in a new cosmos. The dragons of materialism and meaninglessness that have long plagued humanity are beheaded by science's sharpest blades. Purpose is restored to the universe. All sentient beings,our brothers and sisters who creep and crawl and walk across the planet, soar above its treetops, swim along its coastlines and roam its watery abysses, are dreamers and co-creators with us in this ongoing miracle that exploded out of a primal fireball fourteen thousand million years ago. Perhaps this mission of growing more and more consciousness may serve as our future existential myth. It would be a good one.
Co-sponsored by the McMillan Institute for Jungian Studies, the Fay Lecture Series (originally founded by the late Carolyn Fay, the legendary Houston philanthropist) welcomes internationally-renowned scholars from the world of analytical psychology to Houston's Jung Center for a weekend of pioneering and thought-provoking research into the mystery of the objective psyche. Each lecture series is later published in hardcover by Texas A&M University Press and makes a significant and enduring contribution to the history of psychology. This year the center warmly welcomed Heyong Shen, the foremost scholar of Jungian analysis in China.
The symposium explored some of the various roles that quantum theory and the nature of matter have played in shaping our understanding of who we are what our place in the cosmos is. In particular, presenters looked at the mind-matter interface and the nature of time from the perspectives of psychology, philosophy of mind, and quantum theory and the obvious but still contentious resonances these display with the phenomenologies of mystical, imaginal, synchronistic, and other “rogue” or anomalous phenomena.
Local realism’s limitations for a complete view of reality have been empirically proven time and again in the laboratories of the world’s physicists for over a quarter of a century. Despite this fact, philosophical materialism remains modernity’s reigning existential myth and continues to infect the contemporary world’s popular culture like a narcotic fantasy, serving as the default intellectual setting for many of our private assumptions, global media corporations, information technologies, political ideologies, and public entertainments. What does liberating ourselves from its restrictions imply for the future? What might a restoration of things like meaning and purpose to reality portend? And what are the evolutionary/revolutionary implications of such an emerging consciousness?
The McMillan Institute in Houston, TX features lectures, workshops, and conferences that are meant to deepen the understanding of C. G. Jung's works. It is also the new home of the Fay Lectures which have spotlighted the most innovative scholars in analytical psychology from around the world.
Learn more about the Jung Center here